"""K-means clustering""" # Authors: Gael Varoquaux # Thomas Rueckstiess # James Bergstra # Jan Schlueter # Nelle Varoquaux # Peter Prettenhofer # Olivier Grisel # Mathieu Blondel # Robert Layton # License: BSD 3 clause import warnings import numpy as np import scipy.sparse as sp from ..base import BaseEstimator, ClusterMixin, TransformerMixin from ..metrics.pairwise import euclidean_distances from ..metrics.pairwise import pairwise_distances_argmin_min from ..utils.extmath import row_norms, squared_norm, stable_cumsum from ..utils.sparsefuncs_fast import assign_rows_csr from ..utils.sparsefuncs import mean_variance_axis from ..utils import check_array from ..utils import check_random_state from ..utils import as_float_array from ..utils import gen_batches from ..utils.validation import check_is_fitted from ..utils.validation import FLOAT_DTYPES from ..externals.joblib import Parallel from ..externals.joblib import delayed from ..externals.six import string_types from . import _k_means from ._k_means_elkan import k_means_elkan ############################################################################### # Initialization heuristic def _k_init(X, n_clusters, x_squared_norms, random_state, n_local_trials=None): """Init n_clusters seeds according to k-means++ Parameters ----------- X : array or sparse matrix, shape (n_samples, n_features) The data to pick seeds for. To avoid memory copy, the input data should be double precision (dtype=np.float64). n_clusters : integer The number of seeds to choose x_squared_norms : array, shape (n_samples,) Squared Euclidean norm of each data point. random_state : numpy.RandomState The generator used to initialize the centers. n_local_trials : integer, optional The number of seeding trials for each center (except the first), of which the one reducing inertia the most is greedily chosen. Set to None to make the number of trials depend logarithmically on the number of seeds (2+log(k)); this is the default. Notes ----- Selects initial cluster centers for k-mean clustering in a smart way to speed up convergence. see: Arthur, D. and Vassilvitskii, S. "k-means++: the advantages of careful seeding". ACM-SIAM symposium on Discrete algorithms. 2007 Version ported from http://www.stanford.edu/~darthur/kMeansppTest.zip, which is the implementation used in the aforementioned paper. """ n_samples, n_features = X.shape centers = np.empty((n_clusters, n_features), dtype=X.dtype) assert x_squared_norms is not None, 'x_squared_norms None in _k_init' # Set the number of local seeding trials if none is given if n_local_trials is None: # This is what Arthur/Vassilvitskii tried, but did not report # specific results for other than mentioning in the conclusion # that it helped. n_local_trials = 2 + int(np.log(n_clusters)) # Pick first center randomly center_id = random_state.randint(n_samples) if sp.issparse(X): centers[0] = X[center_id].toarray() else: centers[0] = X[center_id] # Initialize list of closest distances and calculate current potential closest_dist_sq = euclidean_distances( centers[0, np.newaxis], X, Y_norm_squared=x_squared_norms, squared=True) current_pot = closest_dist_sq.sum() # Pick the remaining n_clusters-1 points for c in range(1, n_clusters): # Choose center candidates by sampling with probability proportional # to the squared distance to the closest existing center rand_vals = random_state.random_sample(n_local_trials) * current_pot candidate_ids = np.searchsorted(stable_cumsum(closest_dist_sq), rand_vals) # Compute distances to center candidates distance_to_candidates = euclidean_distances( X[candidate_ids], X, Y_norm_squared=x_squared_norms, squared=True) # Decide which candidate is the best best_candidate = None best_pot = None best_dist_sq = None for trial in range(n_local_trials): # Compute potential when including center candidate new_dist_sq = np.minimum(closest_dist_sq, distance_to_candidates[trial]) new_pot = new_dist_sq.sum() # Store result if it is the best local trial so far if (best_candidate is None) or (new_pot < best_pot): best_candidate = candidate_ids[trial] best_pot = new_pot best_dist_sq = new_dist_sq # Permanently add best center candidate found in local tries if sp.issparse(X): centers[c] = X[best_candidate].toarray() else: centers[c] = X[best_candidate] current_pot = best_pot closest_dist_sq = best_dist_sq return centers ############################################################################### # K-means batch estimation by EM (expectation maximization) def _validate_center_shape(X, n_centers, centers): """Check if centers is compatible with X and n_centers""" if len(centers) != n_centers: raise ValueError('The shape of the initial centers (%s) ' 'does not match the number of clusters %i' % (centers.shape, n_centers)) if centers.shape[1] != X.shape[1]: raise ValueError( "The number of features of the initial centers %s " "does not match the number of features of the data %s." % (centers.shape[1], X.shape[1])) def _tolerance(X, tol): """Return a tolerance which is independent of the dataset""" if sp.issparse(X): variances = mean_variance_axis(X, axis=0)[1] else: variances = np.var(X, axis=0) return np.mean(variances) * tol def k_means(X, n_clusters, init='k-means++', precompute_distances='auto', n_init=10, max_iter=300, verbose=False, tol=1e-4, random_state=None, copy_x=True, n_jobs=1, algorithm="auto", return_n_iter=False): """K-means clustering algorithm. Read more in the :ref:`User Guide `. Parameters ---------- X : array-like or sparse matrix, shape (n_samples, n_features) The observations to cluster. n_clusters : int The number of clusters to form as well as the number of centroids to generate. init : {'k-means++', 'random', or ndarray, or a callable}, optional Method for initialization, default to 'k-means++': 'k-means++' : selects initial cluster centers for k-mean clustering in a smart way to speed up convergence. See section Notes in k_init for more details. 'random': generate k centroids from a Gaussian with mean and variance estimated from the data. If an ndarray is passed, it should be of shape (n_clusters, n_features) and gives the initial centers. If a callable is passed, it should take arguments X, k and and a random state and return an initialization. precompute_distances : {'auto', True, False} Precompute distances (faster but takes more memory). 'auto' : do not precompute distances if n_samples * n_clusters > 12 million. This corresponds to about 100MB overhead per job using double precision. True : always precompute distances False : never precompute distances n_init : int, optional, default: 10 Number of time the k-means algorithm will be run with different centroid seeds. The final results will be the best output of n_init consecutive runs in terms of inertia. max_iter : int, optional, default 300 Maximum number of iterations of the k-means algorithm to run. verbose : boolean, optional Verbosity mode. tol : float, optional The relative increment in the results before declaring convergence. random_state : int, RandomState instance or None, optional, default: None If int, random_state is the seed used by the random number generator; If RandomState instance, random_state is the random number generator; If None, the random number generator is the RandomState instance used by `np.random`. copy_x : boolean, optional When pre-computing distances it is more numerically accurate to center the data first. If copy_x is True, then the original data is not modified. If False, the original data is modified, and put back before the function returns, but small numerical differences may be introduced by subtracting and then adding the data mean. n_jobs : int The number of jobs to use for the computation. This works by computing each of the n_init runs in parallel. If -1 all CPUs are used. If 1 is given, no parallel computing code is used at all, which is useful for debugging. For n_jobs below -1, (n_cpus + 1 + n_jobs) are used. Thus for n_jobs = -2, all CPUs but one are used. algorithm : "auto", "full" or "elkan", default="auto" K-means algorithm to use. The classical EM-style algorithm is "full". The "elkan" variation is more efficient by using the triangle inequality, but currently doesn't support sparse data. "auto" chooses "elkan" for dense data and "full" for sparse data. return_n_iter : bool, optional Whether or not to return the number of iterations. Returns ------- centroid : float ndarray with shape (k, n_features) Centroids found at the last iteration of k-means. label : integer ndarray with shape (n_samples,) label[i] is the code or index of the centroid the i'th observation is closest to. inertia : float The final value of the inertia criterion (sum of squared distances to the closest centroid for all observations in the training set). best_n_iter : int Number of iterations corresponding to the best results. Returned only if `return_n_iter` is set to True. """ if n_init <= 0: raise ValueError("Invalid number of initializations." " n_init=%d must be bigger than zero." % n_init) random_state = check_random_state(random_state) if max_iter <= 0: raise ValueError('Number of iterations should be a positive number,' ' got %d instead' % max_iter) X = as_float_array(X, copy=copy_x) tol = _tolerance(X, tol) # If the distances are precomputed every job will create a matrix of shape # (n_clusters, n_samples). To stop KMeans from eating up memory we only # activate this if the created matrix is guaranteed to be under 100MB. 12 # million entries consume a little under 100MB if they are of type double. if precompute_distances == 'auto': n_samples = X.shape[0] precompute_distances = (n_clusters * n_samples) < 12e6 elif isinstance(precompute_distances, bool): pass else: raise ValueError("precompute_distances should be 'auto' or True/False" ", but a value of %r was passed" % precompute_distances) # Validate init array if hasattr(init, '__array__'): init = check_array(init, dtype=X.dtype.type, copy=True) _validate_center_shape(X, n_clusters, init) if n_init != 1: warnings.warn( 'Explicit initial center position passed: ' 'performing only one init in k-means instead of n_init=%d' % n_init, RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=2) n_init = 1 # subtract of mean of x for more accurate distance computations if not sp.issparse(X): X_mean = X.mean(axis=0) # The copy was already done above X -= X_mean if hasattr(init, '__array__'): init -= X_mean # precompute squared norms of data points x_squared_norms = row_norms(X, squared=True) best_labels, best_inertia, best_centers = None, None, None if n_clusters == 1: # elkan doesn't make sense for a single cluster, full will produce # the right result. algorithm = "full" if algorithm == "auto": algorithm = "full" if sp.issparse(X) else 'elkan' if algorithm == "full": kmeans_single = _kmeans_single_lloyd elif algorithm == "elkan": kmeans_single = _kmeans_single_elkan else: raise ValueError("Algorithm must be 'auto', 'full' or 'elkan', got" " %s" % str(algorithm)) if n_jobs == 1: # For a single thread, less memory is needed if we just store one set # of the best results (as opposed to one set per run per thread). for it in range(n_init): # run a k-means once labels, inertia, centers, n_iter_ = kmeans_single( X, n_clusters, max_iter=max_iter, init=init, verbose=verbose, precompute_distances=precompute_distances, tol=tol, x_squared_norms=x_squared_norms, random_state=random_state) # determine if these results are the best so far if best_inertia is None or inertia < best_inertia: best_labels = labels.copy() best_centers = centers.copy() best_inertia = inertia best_n_iter = n_iter_ else: # parallelisation of k-means runs seeds = random_state.randint(np.iinfo(np.int32).max, size=n_init) results = Parallel(n_jobs=n_jobs, verbose=0)( delayed(kmeans_single)(X, n_clusters, max_iter=max_iter, init=init, verbose=verbose, tol=tol, precompute_distances=precompute_distances, x_squared_norms=x_squared_norms, # Change seed to ensure variety random_state=seed) for seed in seeds) # Get results with the lowest inertia labels, inertia, centers, n_iters = zip(*results) best = np.argmin(inertia) best_labels = labels[best] best_inertia = inertia[best] best_centers = centers[best] best_n_iter = n_iters[best] if not sp.issparse(X): if not copy_x: X += X_mean best_centers += X_mean if return_n_iter: return best_centers, best_labels, best_inertia, best_n_iter else: return best_centers, best_labels, best_inertia def _kmeans_single_elkan(X, n_clusters, max_iter=300, init='k-means++', verbose=False, x_squared_norms=None, random_state=None, tol=1e-4, precompute_distances=True): if sp.issparse(X): raise ValueError("algorithm='elkan' not supported for sparse input X") X = check_array(X, order="C") random_state = check_random_state(random_state) if x_squared_norms is None: x_squared_norms = row_norms(X, squared=True) # init centers = _init_centroids(X, n_clusters, init, random_state=random_state, x_squared_norms=x_squared_norms) centers = np.ascontiguousarray(centers) if verbose: print('Initialization complete') centers, labels, n_iter = k_means_elkan(X, n_clusters, centers, tol=tol, max_iter=max_iter, verbose=verbose) inertia = np.sum((X - centers[labels]) ** 2, dtype=np.float64) return labels, inertia, centers, n_iter def _kmeans_single_lloyd(X, n_clusters, max_iter=300, init='k-means++', verbose=False, x_squared_norms=None, random_state=None, tol=1e-4, precompute_distances=True): """A single run of k-means, assumes preparation completed prior. Parameters ---------- X : array-like of floats, shape (n_samples, n_features) The observations to cluster. n_clusters : int The number of clusters to form as well as the number of centroids to generate. max_iter : int, optional, default 300 Maximum number of iterations of the k-means algorithm to run. init : {'k-means++', 'random', or ndarray, or a callable}, optional Method for initialization, default to 'k-means++': 'k-means++' : selects initial cluster centers for k-mean clustering in a smart way to speed up convergence. See section Notes in k_init for more details. 'random': generate k centroids from a Gaussian with mean and variance estimated from the data. If an ndarray is passed, it should be of shape (k, p) and gives the initial centers. If a callable is passed, it should take arguments X, k and and a random state and return an initialization. tol : float, optional The relative increment in the results before declaring convergence. verbose : boolean, optional Verbosity mode x_squared_norms : array Precomputed x_squared_norms. precompute_distances : boolean, default: True Precompute distances (faster but takes more memory). random_state : int, RandomState instance or None, optional, default: None If int, random_state is the seed used by the random number generator; If RandomState instance, random_state is the random number generator; If None, the random number generator is the RandomState instance used by `np.random`. Returns ------- centroid : float ndarray with shape (k, n_features) Centroids found at the last iteration of k-means. label : integer ndarray with shape (n_samples,) label[i] is the code or index of the centroid the i'th observation is closest to. inertia : float The final value of the inertia criterion (sum of squared distances to the closest centroid for all observations in the training set). n_iter : int Number of iterations run. """ random_state = check_random_state(random_state) best_labels, best_inertia, best_centers = None, None, None # init centers = _init_centroids(X, n_clusters, init, random_state=random_state, x_squared_norms=x_squared_norms) if verbose: print("Initialization complete") # Allocate memory to store the distances for each sample to its # closer center for reallocation in case of ties distances = np.zeros(shape=(X.shape[0],), dtype=X.dtype) # iterations for i in range(max_iter): centers_old = centers.copy() # labels assignment is also called the E-step of EM labels, inertia = \ _labels_inertia(X, x_squared_norms, centers, precompute_distances=precompute_distances, distances=distances) # computation of the means is also called the M-step of EM if sp.issparse(X): centers = _k_means._centers_sparse(X, labels, n_clusters, distances) else: centers = _k_means._centers_dense(X, labels, n_clusters, distances) if verbose: print("Iteration %2d, inertia %.3f" % (i, inertia)) if best_inertia is None or inertia < best_inertia: best_labels = labels.copy() best_centers = centers.copy() best_inertia = inertia center_shift_total = squared_norm(centers_old - centers) if center_shift_total <= tol: if verbose: print("Converged at iteration %d: " "center shift %e within tolerance %e" % (i, center_shift_total, tol)) break if center_shift_total > 0: # rerun E-step in case of non-convergence so that predicted labels # match cluster centers best_labels, best_inertia = \ _labels_inertia(X, x_squared_norms, best_centers, precompute_distances=precompute_distances, distances=distances) return best_labels, best_inertia, best_centers, i + 1 def _labels_inertia_precompute_dense(X, x_squared_norms, centers, distances): """Compute labels and inertia using a full distance matrix. This will overwrite the 'distances' array in-place. Parameters ---------- X : numpy array, shape (n_sample, n_features) Input data. x_squared_norms : numpy array, shape (n_samples,) Precomputed squared norms of X. centers : numpy array, shape (n_clusters, n_features) Cluster centers which data is assigned to. distances : numpy array, shape (n_samples,) Pre-allocated array in which distances are stored. Returns ------- labels : numpy array, dtype=np.int, shape (n_samples,) Indices of clusters that samples are assigned to. inertia : float Sum of squared distances of samples to their closest cluster center. """ n_samples = X.shape[0] # Breakup nearest neighbor distance computation into batches to prevent # memory blowup in the case of a large number of samples and clusters. # TODO: Once PR #7383 is merged use check_inputs=False in metric_kwargs. labels, mindist = pairwise_distances_argmin_min( X=X, Y=centers, metric='euclidean', metric_kwargs={'squared': True}) # cython k-means code assumes int32 inputs labels = labels.astype(np.int32) if n_samples == distances.shape[0]: # distances will be changed in-place distances[:] = mindist inertia = mindist.sum() return labels, inertia def _labels_inertia(X, x_squared_norms, centers, precompute_distances=True, distances=None): """E step of the K-means EM algorithm. Compute the labels and the inertia of the given samples and centers. This will compute the distances in-place. Parameters ---------- X : float64 array-like or CSR sparse matrix, shape (n_samples, n_features) The input samples to assign to the labels. x_squared_norms : array, shape (n_samples,) Precomputed squared euclidean norm of each data point, to speed up computations. centers : float array, shape (k, n_features) The cluster centers. precompute_distances : boolean, default: True Precompute distances (faster but takes more memory). distances : float array, shape (n_samples,) Pre-allocated array to be filled in with each sample's distance to the closest center. Returns ------- labels : int array of shape(n) The resulting assignment inertia : float Sum of squared distances of samples to their closest cluster center. """ n_samples = X.shape[0] # set the default value of centers to -1 to be able to detect any anomaly # easily labels = -np.ones(n_samples, np.int32) if distances is None: distances = np.zeros(shape=(0,), dtype=X.dtype) # distances will be changed in-place if sp.issparse(X): inertia = _k_means._assign_labels_csr( X, x_squared_norms, centers, labels, distances=distances) else: if precompute_distances: return _labels_inertia_precompute_dense(X, x_squared_norms, centers, distances) inertia = _k_means._assign_labels_array( X, x_squared_norms, centers, labels, distances=distances) return labels, inertia def _init_centroids(X, k, init, random_state=None, x_squared_norms=None, init_size=None): """Compute the initial centroids Parameters ---------- X : array, shape (n_samples, n_features) k : int number of centroids init : {'k-means++', 'random' or ndarray or callable} optional Method for initialization random_state : int, RandomState instance or None, optional, default: None If int, random_state is the seed used by the random number generator; If RandomState instance, random_state is the random number generator; If None, the random number generator is the RandomState instance used by `np.random`. x_squared_norms : array, shape (n_samples,), optional Squared euclidean norm of each data point. Pass it if you have it at hands already to avoid it being recomputed here. Default: None init_size : int, optional Number of samples to randomly sample for speeding up the initialization (sometimes at the expense of accuracy): the only algorithm is initialized by running a batch KMeans on a random subset of the data. This needs to be larger than k. Returns ------- centers : array, shape(k, n_features) """ random_state = check_random_state(random_state) n_samples = X.shape[0] if x_squared_norms is None: x_squared_norms = row_norms(X, squared=True) if init_size is not None and init_size < n_samples: if init_size < k: warnings.warn( "init_size=%d should be larger than k=%d. " "Setting it to 3*k" % (init_size, k), RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=2) init_size = 3 * k init_indices = random_state.randint(0, n_samples, init_size) X = X[init_indices] x_squared_norms = x_squared_norms[init_indices] n_samples = X.shape[0] elif n_samples < k: raise ValueError( "n_samples=%d should be larger than k=%d" % (n_samples, k)) if isinstance(init, string_types) and init == 'k-means++': centers = _k_init(X, k, random_state=random_state, x_squared_norms=x_squared_norms) elif isinstance(init, string_types) and init == 'random': seeds = random_state.permutation(n_samples)[:k] centers = X[seeds] elif hasattr(init, '__array__'): # ensure that the centers have the same dtype as X # this is a requirement of fused types of cython centers = np.array(init, dtype=X.dtype) elif callable(init): centers = init(X, k, random_state=random_state) centers = np.asarray(centers, dtype=X.dtype) else: raise ValueError("the init parameter for the k-means should " "be 'k-means++' or 'random' or an ndarray, " "'%s' (type '%s') was passed." % (init, type(init))) if sp.issparse(centers): centers = centers.toarray() _validate_center_shape(X, k, centers) return centers class KMeans(BaseEstimator, ClusterMixin, TransformerMixin): """K-Means clustering Read more in the :ref:`User Guide `. Parameters ---------- n_clusters : int, optional, default: 8 The number of clusters to form as well as the number of centroids to generate. init : {'k-means++', 'random' or an ndarray} Method for initialization, defaults to 'k-means++': 'k-means++' : selects initial cluster centers for k-mean clustering in a smart way to speed up convergence. See section Notes in k_init for more details. 'random': choose k observations (rows) at random from data for the initial centroids. If an ndarray is passed, it should be of shape (n_clusters, n_features) and gives the initial centers. n_init : int, default: 10 Number of time the k-means algorithm will be run with different centroid seeds. The final results will be the best output of n_init consecutive runs in terms of inertia. max_iter : int, default: 300 Maximum number of iterations of the k-means algorithm for a single run. tol : float, default: 1e-4 Relative tolerance with regards to inertia to declare convergence precompute_distances : {'auto', True, False} Precompute distances (faster but takes more memory). 'auto' : do not precompute distances if n_samples * n_clusters > 12 million. This corresponds to about 100MB overhead per job using double precision. True : always precompute distances False : never precompute distances verbose : int, default 0 Verbosity mode. random_state : int, RandomState instance or None, optional, default: None If int, random_state is the seed used by the random number generator; If RandomState instance, random_state is the random number generator; If None, the random number generator is the RandomState instance used by `np.random`. copy_x : boolean, default True When pre-computing distances it is more numerically accurate to center the data first. If copy_x is True, then the original data is not modified. If False, the original data is modified, and put back before the function returns, but small numerical differences may be introduced by subtracting and then adding the data mean. n_jobs : int The number of jobs to use for the computation. This works by computing each of the n_init runs in parallel. If -1 all CPUs are used. If 1 is given, no parallel computing code is used at all, which is useful for debugging. For n_jobs below -1, (n_cpus + 1 + n_jobs) are used. Thus for n_jobs = -2, all CPUs but one are used. algorithm : "auto", "full" or "elkan", default="auto" K-means algorithm to use. The classical EM-style algorithm is "full". The "elkan" variation is more efficient by using the triangle inequality, but currently doesn't support sparse data. "auto" chooses "elkan" for dense data and "full" for sparse data. Attributes ---------- cluster_centers_ : array, [n_clusters, n_features] Coordinates of cluster centers labels_ : Labels of each point inertia_ : float Sum of squared distances of samples to their closest cluster center. Examples -------- >>> from sklearn.cluster import KMeans >>> import numpy as np >>> X = np.array([[1, 2], [1, 4], [1, 0], ... [4, 2], [4, 4], [4, 0]]) >>> kmeans = KMeans(n_clusters=2, random_state=0).fit(X) >>> kmeans.labels_ array([0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1], dtype=int32) >>> kmeans.predict([[0, 0], [4, 4]]) array([0, 1], dtype=int32) >>> kmeans.cluster_centers_ array([[ 1., 2.], [ 4., 2.]]) See also -------- MiniBatchKMeans Alternative online implementation that does incremental updates of the centers positions using mini-batches. For large scale learning (say n_samples > 10k) MiniBatchKMeans is probably much faster than the default batch implementation. Notes ------ The k-means problem is solved using Lloyd's algorithm. The average complexity is given by O(k n T), were n is the number of samples and T is the number of iteration. The worst case complexity is given by O(n^(k+2/p)) with n = n_samples, p = n_features. (D. Arthur and S. Vassilvitskii, 'How slow is the k-means method?' SoCG2006) In practice, the k-means algorithm is very fast (one of the fastest clustering algorithms available), but it falls in local minima. That's why it can be useful to restart it several times. """ def __init__(self, n_clusters=8, init='k-means++', n_init=10, max_iter=300, tol=1e-4, precompute_distances='auto', verbose=0, random_state=None, copy_x=True, n_jobs=1, algorithm='auto'): self.n_clusters = n_clusters self.init = init self.max_iter = max_iter self.tol = tol self.precompute_distances = precompute_distances self.n_init = n_init self.verbose = verbose self.random_state = random_state self.copy_x = copy_x self.n_jobs = n_jobs self.algorithm = algorithm def _check_fit_data(self, X): """Verify that the number of samples given is larger than k""" X = check_array(X, accept_sparse='csr', dtype=[np.float64, np.float32]) if X.shape[0] < self.n_clusters: raise ValueError("n_samples=%d should be >= n_clusters=%d" % ( X.shape[0], self.n_clusters)) return X def _check_test_data(self, X): X = check_array(X, accept_sparse='csr', dtype=FLOAT_DTYPES) n_samples, n_features = X.shape expected_n_features = self.cluster_centers_.shape[1] if not n_features == expected_n_features: raise ValueError("Incorrect number of features. " "Got %d features, expected %d" % ( n_features, expected_n_features)) return X def fit(self, X, y=None): """Compute k-means clustering. Parameters ---------- X : array-like or sparse matrix, shape=(n_samples, n_features) Training instances to cluster. y : Ignored """ random_state = check_random_state(self.random_state) X = self._check_fit_data(X) self.cluster_centers_, self.labels_, self.inertia_, self.n_iter_ = \ k_means( X, n_clusters=self.n_clusters, init=self.init, n_init=self.n_init, max_iter=self.max_iter, verbose=self.verbose, precompute_distances=self.precompute_distances, tol=self.tol, random_state=random_state, copy_x=self.copy_x, n_jobs=self.n_jobs, algorithm=self.algorithm, return_n_iter=True) return self def fit_predict(self, X, y=None): """Compute cluster centers and predict cluster index for each sample. Convenience method; equivalent to calling fit(X) followed by predict(X). Parameters ---------- X : {array-like, sparse matrix}, shape = [n_samples, n_features] New data to transform. u : Ignored Returns ------- labels : array, shape [n_samples,] Index of the cluster each sample belongs to. """ return self.fit(X).labels_ def fit_transform(self, X, y=None): """Compute clustering and transform X to cluster-distance space. Equivalent to fit(X).transform(X), but more efficiently implemented. Parameters ---------- X : {array-like, sparse matrix}, shape = [n_samples, n_features] New data to transform. y : Ignored Returns ------- X_new : array, shape [n_samples, k] X transformed in the new space. """ # Currently, this just skips a copy of the data if it is not in # np.array or CSR format already. # XXX This skips _check_test_data, which may change the dtype; # we should refactor the input validation. X = self._check_fit_data(X) return self.fit(X)._transform(X) def transform(self, X): """Transform X to a cluster-distance space. In the new space, each dimension is the distance to the cluster centers. Note that even if X is sparse, the array returned by `transform` will typically be dense. Parameters ---------- X : {array-like, sparse matrix}, shape = [n_samples, n_features] New data to transform. Returns ------- X_new : array, shape [n_samples, k] X transformed in the new space. """ check_is_fitted(self, 'cluster_centers_') X = self._check_test_data(X) return self._transform(X) def _transform(self, X): """guts of transform method; no input validation""" return euclidean_distances(X, self.cluster_centers_) def predict(self, X): """Predict the closest cluster each sample in X belongs to. In the vector quantization literature, `cluster_centers_` is called the code book and each value returned by `predict` is the index of the closest code in the code book. Parameters ---------- X : {array-like, sparse matrix}, shape = [n_samples, n_features] New data to predict. Returns ------- labels : array, shape [n_samples,] Index of the cluster each sample belongs to. """ check_is_fitted(self, 'cluster_centers_') X = self._check_test_data(X) x_squared_norms = row_norms(X, squared=True) return _labels_inertia(X, x_squared_norms, self.cluster_centers_)[0] def score(self, X, y=None): """Opposite of the value of X on the K-means objective. Parameters ---------- X : {array-like, sparse matrix}, shape = [n_samples, n_features] New data. y : Ignored Returns ------- score : float Opposite of the value of X on the K-means objective. """ check_is_fitted(self, 'cluster_centers_') X = self._check_test_data(X) x_squared_norms = row_norms(X, squared=True) return -_labels_inertia(X, x_squared_norms, self.cluster_centers_)[1] def _mini_batch_step(X, x_squared_norms, centers, counts, old_center_buffer, compute_squared_diff, distances, random_reassign=False, random_state=None, reassignment_ratio=.01, verbose=False): """Incremental update of the centers for the Minibatch K-Means algorithm. Parameters ---------- X : array, shape (n_samples, n_features) The original data array. x_squared_norms : array, shape (n_samples,) Squared euclidean norm of each data point. centers : array, shape (k, n_features) The cluster centers. This array is MODIFIED IN PLACE counts : array, shape (k,) The vector in which we keep track of the numbers of elements in a cluster. This array is MODIFIED IN PLACE distances : array, dtype float, shape (n_samples), optional If not None, should be a pre-allocated array that will be used to store the distances of each sample to its closest center. May not be None when random_reassign is True. random_state : int, RandomState instance or None, optional, default: None If int, random_state is the seed used by the random number generator; If RandomState instance, random_state is the random number generator; If None, the random number generator is the RandomState instance used by `np.random`. random_reassign : boolean, optional If True, centers with very low counts are randomly reassigned to observations. reassignment_ratio : float, optional Control the fraction of the maximum number of counts for a center to be reassigned. A higher value means that low count centers are more likely to be reassigned, which means that the model will take longer to converge, but should converge in a better clustering. verbose : bool, optional, default False Controls the verbosity. compute_squared_diff : bool If set to False, the squared diff computation is skipped. old_center_buffer : int Copy of old centers for monitoring convergence. Returns ------- inertia : float Sum of squared distances of samples to their closest cluster center. squared_diff : numpy array, shape (n_clusters,) Squared distances between previous and updated cluster centers. """ # Perform label assignment to nearest centers nearest_center, inertia = _labels_inertia(X, x_squared_norms, centers, distances=distances) if random_reassign and reassignment_ratio > 0: random_state = check_random_state(random_state) # Reassign clusters that have very low counts to_reassign = counts < reassignment_ratio * counts.max() # pick at most .5 * batch_size samples as new centers if to_reassign.sum() > .5 * X.shape[0]: indices_dont_reassign = np.argsort(counts)[int(.5 * X.shape[0]):] to_reassign[indices_dont_reassign] = False n_reassigns = to_reassign.sum() if n_reassigns: # Pick new clusters amongst observations with uniform probability new_centers = random_state.choice(X.shape[0], replace=False, size=n_reassigns) if verbose: print("[MiniBatchKMeans] Reassigning %i cluster centers." % n_reassigns) if sp.issparse(X) and not sp.issparse(centers): assign_rows_csr(X, new_centers.astype(np.intp), np.where(to_reassign)[0].astype(np.intp), centers) else: centers[to_reassign] = X[new_centers] # reset counts of reassigned centers, but don't reset them too small # to avoid instant reassignment. This is a pretty dirty hack as it # also modifies the learning rates. counts[to_reassign] = np.min(counts[~to_reassign]) # implementation for the sparse CSR representation completely written in # cython if sp.issparse(X): return inertia, _k_means._mini_batch_update_csr( X, x_squared_norms, centers, counts, nearest_center, old_center_buffer, compute_squared_diff) # dense variant in mostly numpy (not as memory efficient though) k = centers.shape[0] squared_diff = 0.0 for center_idx in range(k): # find points from minibatch that are assigned to this center center_mask = nearest_center == center_idx count = center_mask.sum() if count > 0: if compute_squared_diff: old_center_buffer[:] = centers[center_idx] # inplace remove previous count scaling centers[center_idx] *= counts[center_idx] # inplace sum with new points members of this cluster centers[center_idx] += np.sum(X[center_mask], axis=0) # update the count statistics for this center counts[center_idx] += count # inplace rescale to compute mean of all points (old and new) # Note: numpy >= 1.10 does not support '/=' for the following # expression for a mixture of int and float (see numpy issue #6464) centers[center_idx] = centers[center_idx] / counts[center_idx] # update the squared diff if necessary if compute_squared_diff: diff = centers[center_idx].ravel() - old_center_buffer.ravel() squared_diff += np.dot(diff, diff) return inertia, squared_diff def _mini_batch_convergence(model, iteration_idx, n_iter, tol, n_samples, centers_squared_diff, batch_inertia, context, verbose=0): """Helper function to encapsulate the early stopping logic""" # Normalize inertia to be able to compare values when # batch_size changes batch_inertia /= model.batch_size centers_squared_diff /= model.batch_size # Compute an Exponentially Weighted Average of the squared # diff to monitor the convergence while discarding # minibatch-local stochastic variability: # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moving_average ewa_diff = context.get('ewa_diff') ewa_inertia = context.get('ewa_inertia') if ewa_diff is None: ewa_diff = centers_squared_diff ewa_inertia = batch_inertia else: alpha = float(model.batch_size) * 2.0 / (n_samples + 1) alpha = 1.0 if alpha > 1.0 else alpha ewa_diff = ewa_diff * (1 - alpha) + centers_squared_diff * alpha ewa_inertia = ewa_inertia * (1 - alpha) + batch_inertia * alpha # Log progress to be able to monitor convergence if verbose: progress_msg = ( 'Minibatch iteration %d/%d:' ' mean batch inertia: %f, ewa inertia: %f ' % ( iteration_idx + 1, n_iter, batch_inertia, ewa_inertia)) print(progress_msg) # Early stopping based on absolute tolerance on squared change of # centers position (using EWA smoothing) if tol > 0.0 and ewa_diff <= tol: if verbose: print('Converged (small centers change) at iteration %d/%d' % (iteration_idx + 1, n_iter)) return True # Early stopping heuristic due to lack of improvement on smoothed inertia ewa_inertia_min = context.get('ewa_inertia_min') no_improvement = context.get('no_improvement', 0) if ewa_inertia_min is None or ewa_inertia < ewa_inertia_min: no_improvement = 0 ewa_inertia_min = ewa_inertia else: no_improvement += 1 if (model.max_no_improvement is not None and no_improvement >= model.max_no_improvement): if verbose: print('Converged (lack of improvement in inertia)' ' at iteration %d/%d' % (iteration_idx + 1, n_iter)) return True # update the convergence context to maintain state across successive calls: context['ewa_diff'] = ewa_diff context['ewa_inertia'] = ewa_inertia context['ewa_inertia_min'] = ewa_inertia_min context['no_improvement'] = no_improvement return False class MiniBatchKMeans(KMeans): """Mini-Batch K-Means clustering Read more in the :ref:`User Guide `. Parameters ---------- n_clusters : int, optional, default: 8 The number of clusters to form as well as the number of centroids to generate. init : {'k-means++', 'random' or an ndarray}, default: 'k-means++' Method for initialization, defaults to 'k-means++': 'k-means++' : selects initial cluster centers for k-mean clustering in a smart way to speed up convergence. See section Notes in k_init for more details. 'random': choose k observations (rows) at random from data for the initial centroids. If an ndarray is passed, it should be of shape (n_clusters, n_features) and gives the initial centers. max_iter : int, optional Maximum number of iterations over the complete dataset before stopping independently of any early stopping criterion heuristics. batch_size : int, optional, default: 100 Size of the mini batches. verbose : boolean, optional Verbosity mode. compute_labels : boolean, default=True Compute label assignment and inertia for the complete dataset once the minibatch optimization has converged in fit. random_state : int, RandomState instance or None, optional, default: None If int, random_state is the seed used by the random number generator; If RandomState instance, random_state is the random number generator; If None, the random number generator is the RandomState instance used by `np.random`. tol : float, default: 0.0 Control early stopping based on the relative center changes as measured by a smoothed, variance-normalized of the mean center squared position changes. This early stopping heuristics is closer to the one used for the batch variant of the algorithms but induces a slight computational and memory overhead over the inertia heuristic. To disable convergence detection based on normalized center change, set tol to 0.0 (default). max_no_improvement : int, default: 10 Control early stopping based on the consecutive number of mini batches that does not yield an improvement on the smoothed inertia. To disable convergence detection based on inertia, set max_no_improvement to None. init_size : int, optional, default: 3 * batch_size Number of samples to randomly sample for speeding up the initialization (sometimes at the expense of accuracy): the only algorithm is initialized by running a batch KMeans on a random subset of the data. This needs to be larger than n_clusters. n_init : int, default=3 Number of random initializations that are tried. In contrast to KMeans, the algorithm is only run once, using the best of the ``n_init`` initializations as measured by inertia. reassignment_ratio : float, default: 0.01 Control the fraction of the maximum number of counts for a center to be reassigned. A higher value means that low count centers are more easily reassigned, which means that the model will take longer to converge, but should converge in a better clustering. Attributes ---------- cluster_centers_ : array, [n_clusters, n_features] Coordinates of cluster centers labels_ : Labels of each point (if compute_labels is set to True). inertia_ : float The value of the inertia criterion associated with the chosen partition (if compute_labels is set to True). The inertia is defined as the sum of square distances of samples to their nearest neighbor. See also -------- KMeans The classic implementation of the clustering method based on the Lloyd's algorithm. It consumes the whole set of input data at each iteration. Notes ----- See http://www.eecs.tufts.edu/~dsculley/papers/fastkmeans.pdf """ def __init__(self, n_clusters=8, init='k-means++', max_iter=100, batch_size=100, verbose=0, compute_labels=True, random_state=None, tol=0.0, max_no_improvement=10, init_size=None, n_init=3, reassignment_ratio=0.01): super(MiniBatchKMeans, self).__init__( n_clusters=n_clusters, init=init, max_iter=max_iter, verbose=verbose, random_state=random_state, tol=tol, n_init=n_init) self.max_no_improvement = max_no_improvement self.batch_size = batch_size self.compute_labels = compute_labels self.init_size = init_size self.reassignment_ratio = reassignment_ratio def fit(self, X, y=None): """Compute the centroids on X by chunking it into mini-batches. Parameters ---------- X : array-like or sparse matrix, shape=(n_samples, n_features) Training instances to cluster. y : Ignored """ random_state = check_random_state(self.random_state) X = check_array(X, accept_sparse="csr", order='C', dtype=[np.float64, np.float32]) n_samples, n_features = X.shape if n_samples < self.n_clusters: raise ValueError("Number of samples smaller than number " "of clusters.") n_init = self.n_init if hasattr(self.init, '__array__'): self.init = np.ascontiguousarray(self.init, dtype=X.dtype) if n_init != 1: warnings.warn( 'Explicit initial center position passed: ' 'performing only one init in MiniBatchKMeans instead of ' 'n_init=%d' % self.n_init, RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=2) n_init = 1 x_squared_norms = row_norms(X, squared=True) if self.tol > 0.0: tol = _tolerance(X, self.tol) # using tol-based early stopping needs the allocation of a # dedicated before which can be expensive for high dim data: # hence we allocate it outside of the main loop old_center_buffer = np.zeros(n_features, dtype=X.dtype) else: tol = 0.0 # no need for the center buffer if tol-based early stopping is # disabled old_center_buffer = np.zeros(0, dtype=X.dtype) distances = np.zeros(self.batch_size, dtype=X.dtype) n_batches = int(np.ceil(float(n_samples) / self.batch_size)) n_iter = int(self.max_iter * n_batches) init_size = self.init_size if init_size is None: init_size = 3 * self.batch_size if init_size > n_samples: init_size = n_samples self.init_size_ = init_size validation_indices = random_state.randint(0, n_samples, init_size) X_valid = X[validation_indices] x_squared_norms_valid = x_squared_norms[validation_indices] # perform several inits with random sub-sets best_inertia = None for init_idx in range(n_init): if self.verbose: print("Init %d/%d with method: %s" % (init_idx + 1, n_init, self.init)) counts = np.zeros(self.n_clusters, dtype=np.int32) # TODO: once the `k_means` function works with sparse input we # should refactor the following init to use it instead. # Initialize the centers using only a fraction of the data as we # expect n_samples to be very large when using MiniBatchKMeans cluster_centers = _init_centroids( X, self.n_clusters, self.init, random_state=random_state, x_squared_norms=x_squared_norms, init_size=init_size) # Compute the label assignment on the init dataset batch_inertia, centers_squared_diff = _mini_batch_step( X_valid, x_squared_norms[validation_indices], cluster_centers, counts, old_center_buffer, False, distances=None, verbose=self.verbose) # Keep only the best cluster centers across independent inits on # the common validation set _, inertia = _labels_inertia(X_valid, x_squared_norms_valid, cluster_centers) if self.verbose: print("Inertia for init %d/%d: %f" % (init_idx + 1, n_init, inertia)) if best_inertia is None or inertia < best_inertia: self.cluster_centers_ = cluster_centers self.counts_ = counts best_inertia = inertia # Empty context to be used inplace by the convergence check routine convergence_context = {} # Perform the iterative optimization until the final convergence # criterion for iteration_idx in range(n_iter): # Sample a minibatch from the full dataset minibatch_indices = random_state.randint( 0, n_samples, self.batch_size) # Perform the actual update step on the minibatch data batch_inertia, centers_squared_diff = _mini_batch_step( X[minibatch_indices], x_squared_norms[minibatch_indices], self.cluster_centers_, self.counts_, old_center_buffer, tol > 0.0, distances=distances, # Here we randomly choose whether to perform # random reassignment: the choice is done as a function # of the iteration index, and the minimum number of # counts, in order to force this reassignment to happen # every once in a while random_reassign=((iteration_idx + 1) % (10 + self.counts_.min()) == 0), random_state=random_state, reassignment_ratio=self.reassignment_ratio, verbose=self.verbose) # Monitor convergence and do early stopping if necessary if _mini_batch_convergence( self, iteration_idx, n_iter, tol, n_samples, centers_squared_diff, batch_inertia, convergence_context, verbose=self.verbose): break self.n_iter_ = iteration_idx + 1 if self.compute_labels: self.labels_, self.inertia_ = self._labels_inertia_minibatch(X) return self def _labels_inertia_minibatch(self, X): """Compute labels and inertia using mini batches. This is slightly slower than doing everything at once but preventes memory errors / segfaults. Parameters ---------- X : array-like, shape (n_samples, n_features) Input data. Returns ------- labels : array, shap (n_samples,) Cluster labels for each point. inertia : float Sum of squared distances of points to nearest cluster. """ if self.verbose: print('Computing label assignment and total inertia') x_squared_norms = row_norms(X, squared=True) slices = gen_batches(X.shape[0], self.batch_size) results = [_labels_inertia(X[s], x_squared_norms[s], self.cluster_centers_) for s in slices] labels, inertia = zip(*results) return np.hstack(labels), np.sum(inertia) def partial_fit(self, X, y=None): """Update k means estimate on a single mini-batch X. Parameters ---------- X : array-like, shape = [n_samples, n_features] Coordinates of the data points to cluster. y : Ignored """ X = check_array(X, accept_sparse="csr") n_samples, n_features = X.shape if hasattr(self.init, '__array__'): self.init = np.ascontiguousarray(self.init, dtype=X.dtype) if n_samples == 0: return self x_squared_norms = row_norms(X, squared=True) self.random_state_ = getattr(self, "random_state_", check_random_state(self.random_state)) if (not hasattr(self, 'counts_') or not hasattr(self, 'cluster_centers_')): # this is the first call partial_fit on this object: # initialize the cluster centers self.cluster_centers_ = _init_centroids( X, self.n_clusters, self.init, random_state=self.random_state_, x_squared_norms=x_squared_norms, init_size=self.init_size) self.counts_ = np.zeros(self.n_clusters, dtype=np.int32) random_reassign = False distances = None else: # The lower the minimum count is, the more we do random # reassignment, however, we don't want to do random # reassignment too often, to allow for building up counts random_reassign = self.random_state_.randint( 10 * (1 + self.counts_.min())) == 0 distances = np.zeros(X.shape[0], dtype=X.dtype) _mini_batch_step(X, x_squared_norms, self.cluster_centers_, self.counts_, np.zeros(0, dtype=X.dtype), 0, random_reassign=random_reassign, distances=distances, random_state=self.random_state_, reassignment_ratio=self.reassignment_ratio, verbose=self.verbose) if self.compute_labels: self.labels_, self.inertia_ = _labels_inertia( X, x_squared_norms, self.cluster_centers_) return self def predict(self, X): """Predict the closest cluster each sample in X belongs to. In the vector quantization literature, `cluster_centers_` is called the code book and each value returned by `predict` is the index of the closest code in the code book. Parameters ---------- X : {array-like, sparse matrix}, shape = [n_samples, n_features] New data to predict. Returns ------- labels : array, shape [n_samples,] Index of the cluster each sample belongs to. """ check_is_fitted(self, 'cluster_centers_') X = self._check_test_data(X) return self._labels_inertia_minibatch(X)[0]